Sunday Times

Rolling with scaly characters in the deep

Laurent Ballesta and his team photograph­ed the coelacanth, thought to have been extinct

-

If a tech-savvy real-estate agent was trying to sell the Earth to an alien couple looking for a starter planet, they would describe it as “cosy”. The idea of the world being small has been drilled into us and our home world certainly feels “intimate”. Is it really that cosy though? A French underwater explorer doesn’t think so. Mankind has been steadily sussing out our surroundin­gs. We’ve found the South Pole, remote bits of the Amazon jungle and popped over to our celestial neighbour, the moon. What we haven’t explored to a large extent is our oceans.

“For me the last wide continent is underwater. There are not a lot of places on land that people haven’t already explored. We even know the surface of the moon better than our own oceans, so exploratio­n of the ocean is the most obvious [place to explore],” said Laurent Ballesta, whose accented English complement­s his wind-swept good looks like a cold G&T does a hot day.

So where in that massively under-explored expanse do you go when looking for a big break? SA of course. Back in 2013 Ballesta and his small team captured what would become world-famous images of a coelacanth in its natural habitat just off Sodwana Bay without the use of submersibl­es.

“Initially it was a very small expedition. There were just three of my friends and no salaries. I told everyone that if we could find a coelacanth and take the first pictures of it, it would be a success and I would be able to pay everyone. I asked them to accept the risk because adventure is not just about diving, it also involves going out with no salary and trusting everything will work out,” said Ballesta.

This was a big deal because up until the 1930s scientists had thought the coelacanth, a prehistori­c fish that is part of the bridge between when life on this planet was entirely aquatic and when it began to move on land, had been extinct for millions of years.

“For ages people thought this fish was extinct and then suddenly in 1933 we found one, like something from a Jurassic Park film,” said Ballesta.

“The difference is that in Jurassic Park you have a park, you have your car and dinosaurs are all around you. For the coelacanth it was very frustratin­g. It was proved that it was still alive but it was very deep, very rare and basically unreachabl­e,” he said.

From that period onward live ones were spotted occasional­ly but always through the window of a submarine. In the mid 2000s South African diver Peter Timm dove deep enough to find a couple of these dino-fish and word spread like wildfire. Unfortunat­ely, diving deep enough to find a coelacanth is dangerous and a number of coelacanth paparazzi would die trying to emulate Timm.

With all of this in mind the lead-up to Ballesta’s big photo shoot was tense. The expedition, code named Gombessa, had been years in the making. Ballesta had pitched his idea to a number of brands and found that only luxury watchmaker Blancpain shared his vision for this expedition. Just getting to the site where the fish was believed to live had taken high-level wrangling and there was a risk of dying. The team, however, were prepared and confident.

“I recall saying: ‘Guys, remember that if we come face to face with him [the coelacanth], it is not the end of the story, it’s just the beginning. So I don’t want to see anybody make high fives and take selfies with the coelacanth’,” said the diver.

“Just because it is a coelacanth didn’t mean the picture was going to be amazing. Remember for most people it’s just an ugly fish,” he added.

Part of the reason there’s been so little underwater exploratio­n is that we know only an estimated 5%-10% of what goes on between coasts. This presents difficulti­es, especially for divers.

“The hardest part was not photograph­ing the coelacanth but getting to his ecosystem and back,” said Ballesta.

The deeper one goes and the longer one spends there, the slower your ascent has to be. Often called the bends, decompress­ion sickness happens when divers come to the surface too fast. During a dive the change in pressure causes gas bubbles to form in the body. Once the pressure starts to lessen due to ascent, those bubbles want to escape. Imagine a champagne bottle. Uncork it slowly and all you get is a sexy puff of smoke. If you’re too eager, on the other hand, you are going to make a mess. Decompress­ion sickness can cause joint pain and fatigue, paralysis and even death. Thus at certain depths 20 minutes of diving can cost as much as five hours’ worth of decompress­ion.

The dangers of decompress­ion make his latest exhibition a sphincter clencher. Having dived beneath icebergs in Antarctica, witnessed an ultra rare mega spawning of Groupers and been in the thick of a thousands-strong shark AGM in French Polynesia, Ballesta has decided to try something a little closer to his home town of Montpellie­r. Next year he is planning to spend three consecutiv­e weeks near the bottom of the Mediterran­ean Sea.

“We want to be able to be down there for five, eight hours or even a full day working at the bottom using a pressurise­d bell and a five square metre pressurise­d chamber for four of us to sleep, rest and eat,” he explained.

The idea is to explore the Mediterran­ean coral reefs which lie about 60m-120m below the surface, much deeper than their tropical counterpar­ts.

“We won’t do our decompress­ion at the end of the one dive but at the end of the whole expedition so we will decompress for three days. It is a long one but that’s fine because I’m going to get to spend three weeks down there in exchange for just three days. I’m used to diving for just 20 minutes and having to do decompress­ion for five hours so this is much better,” he said.

Decompress­ion sickness is not even his primary fear. Divers on oil rigs use a similar pressurise­d bell technique to the one Ballesta and his team will use in the Mediterran­ean. The only difference is that they are generally tethered to the bell. With this mission Ballesta & Co will have no tether to the bell, thus allowing them to roam freely. If you have kids, you can see the problem.

“The biggest issue we’re facing is that we are alone outside the bell without a link. So if we lose the bell, we won’t be able to swim up to the surface for help because that will take days,” he explained.

It’s been a long time since names like Scott, Mallory, Armstrong and Cousteau tickled our collective fancy with their daring feats of discovery. Perhaps that is because most of us think that it’s a small world and we’ve more or less peered into all of its nooks and crannies. Ballesta, like the explorers before him, is out to show us that the world is far more spacious that we could have ever imagined.

 ??  ?? Laurent Ballesta meets a coelacanth in South African waters. Below: Gombessa, Antarctica, shows off its amazing underwater lighting in this 2015 photograph.
Laurent Ballesta meets a coelacanth in South African waters. Below: Gombessa, Antarctica, shows off its amazing underwater lighting in this 2015 photograph.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa